| Literature DB >> 28508740 |
Teresa M Chan1, Brent Thoma2, Andrew Koch Hall3, Aleisha Murnaghan4, Daniel K Ting5, Carly Hagel3, Kristen Weersink3, Paola Camorlinga5, Jill McEwen5, Farhan Bhanji6, Jonathan Sherbino1.
Abstract
A key skill for successful clinician educators is the effective dissemination of scholarly innovations and research. Although there are many ways to disseminate scholarship, the most accepted and rewarded form of educational scholarship is publication in peer-reviewed journals. This paper provides direction for emergency medicine (EM) educators interested in publishing their scholarship via traditional peer-reviewed avenues. It builds upon four literature reviews that aggregated recommendations for writing and publishing high-quality quantitative and qualitative research, innovations, and reviews. Based on the findings from these literature reviews, the recommendations were prioritized for importance and relevance to novice clinician educators by a broad community of medical educators. The top items from the expert vetting process were presented to the 2016 Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians (CAEP) Academic Symposium Consensus Conference on Education Scholarship. This community of EM educators identified the highest yield recommendations for junior medical education scholars. This manuscript elaborates upon the top recommendations identified through this consensus-building process.Keywords: academic writing; education scholarship; publishing
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28508740 DOI: 10.1017/cem.2017.30
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CJEM ISSN: 1481-8035 Impact factor: 2.410